1. Mothers' attachment security predicts their children's sense of God's closeness.
- Author
-
Cassibba R, Granqvist P, and Costantini A
- Subjects
- Child, Child Rearing psychology, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Psychometrics, Qualitative Research, Surveys and Questionnaires, Internal-External Control, Mother-Child Relations, Mothers psychology, Object Attachment, Spirituality
- Abstract
The current research reports that mothers' security of attachment predicts their children's sense of God's closeness. A total of 71 mother-child dyads participated (children's M age = 7.5). Mothers' attachment organization was studied with the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI; Main, Goldwyn, & Hesse, 2003 ) and their religiosity and attachment to God were measured with questionnaires. Children were told stories about visually represented children in attachment-activating and attachment-neutral situations, and placed a God symbol on a felt board to represent God's closeness to the fictional children. Children of secure mothers placed the God symbol closer (d = .78) than children of insecure mothers across both types of situations, suggesting that children's experiences with secure-insecure mothers generalize to their sense of God's closeness. Also, girls (but not boys) placed the God symbol closer in attachment-activating than in attachment-neutral situations, giving partial support for an attachment normative God-as-safe-haven model. Finally, mothers' religiosity and attachment to God were unrelated to child outcomes.
- Published
- 2013
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